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Friday, March 28, 2014

Why do so many Americans feel that we went to bed in the USA
and woke up in China?

It seems that overnight, our government started tracking our
phone calls, denying IRS approvals of organizations for political reasons, deciding
which doctors we can visit and dictating decisions down to the level of what
kind of light bulbs we can buy. Heavy-handed government edicts are making
employers cut jobs, trim employees' hours and drop health insurance.

Secrecy and stonewalling still shroud the stories behind several
of these government abuses of power, but the source of the loss of freedom related
to our own healthcare is hardly mysterious.

In a time of economic crisis, Obamacare has confronted employers
with new business-threatening health insurance costs and heavy Obamacare fines.
Many employers predictably have had to cut jobs and drop healthcare insurance
in order to survive.

By transferring massive power to the administration's federal
bureaucracy, Obamacare snatched away decision-making power not only from employers,
but also from patients and physicians. Obamacare empowered ideologically driven
Obama administration officials to make myriad healthcare decisions for us and
our employers, literally down to the level of specific pills.

The audacity of this pill-level government decision-making was
exposed in the mandate under Obamacare that prescribes the provision of 20 specific
contraceptives. While many Americans, including those with religious convictions,
approve of and use certain contraceptives, the government-mandated,
no-exceptions list includes four especially controversial items (Plan B, ella
and two intrauterine devices--IUDs) that the FDA notes can end the life of a
developing human being.

Despite a hot national controversy over the life-ending pills
on the mandate list, the administration has wielded its new power under
Obamacare with a zeal and rigidity frighteningly similar to that with which totalitarian
countries like China enforce its one-child-only, forced abortion policy. In
fact, the Obama administration's enforcement of its new pill policy has been so
harsh and unyielding that one of Mr. Obama's own appointees to the Supreme
Court--Justice Sonia Sotomayor--intervened with an injunction to stop the
administration from forcing a group of elderly nuns engaged in hospice
ministry, the Little Sisters of the Poor, to participate in the contraceptives
mandate.

Why would the government intervene to force the provision of
free contraceptives for every woman from the Hamptons to Beverly Hills? Everyone
who has easily bought and used contraceptives at the neighborhood drug store can
readily see that the administration has no compelling interest to do so beyond raw
politics and ideology.

President Obama unwittingly confirmed the lack of a compelling
need for government intervention when he asserted in a White House address, "Nearly
99 percent of all women have relied on contraception at some point in their
lives--99 percent." Why would the federal government intervene to mandate
the provision of what even the President admits is a ubiquitous product? The existing
ready access to contraceptives, combined with literally millions of exemptions
handed out by the administration to virtually everyone but religious objectors,
effectively rules out any government claim to a compelling reason for the
mandate.

The Supreme Court today examined justification for trampling Americans'
conscience freedoms. The Court heard two cases of family-owned businesses whose
only crime appears to be not sharing the administration's ideology. Two families
that own and operate companies--the Conestoga Wood Specialties and the Hobby
Lobby--maintain a science- and faith-based objection to providing just the four
of the mandated contraceptives that can end a human life.

As a result, these two family-owned businesses face
government fines totaling millions of dollars as the cost of exercising what
they thought were every American's unalienable First Amendment freedoms. They
could also, of course, simply drop their employees' healthcare insurance
altogether. But that option likewise incurs draconian Obamacare fines, and the
families want to continue providing excellent health coverage to employees as
they were able to before Obamacare.

These families now fight in court for the freedoms that other
Americans have fought for on the battlefield. Ordinary shopkeepers, farmers and
other patriots won our freedoms when they put their lives on the line to challenge
and break the power of a tyrannical king.

As the words of George Washington warn us, "Government
is not reason, it is not eloquence—it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous
servant and a fearful master; never for a moment should it be left to
irresponsible action."

The writer is vice
president for government relations of the Christian Medical Association and
director of Freedom2Care.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Wayne Hepler, owner of the Seneca Hardwood Lumber company, sees his work and providing jobs to the community as part of a stewardship from God. He views his business as an extension of himself and his values.

Hepler has always depended on the first freedoms in the Bill of Rights--especially freedom of religion, speech and assembly. But when the Obama administration insisted that companies like his participate in the provision of life-ending contraceptives, Hepler said that violated those First Amendment freedoms.

Hepler notes that the government is saying, "We are going to force you to do something against your moral principles."

His daughter notes, "Anytime you see someone else's rights being violated, that should be a concern. If you can violate one right, what's to keep another right from being violated?"

Monday, March 17, 2014

The Washington Timesreports that in states across the country, a growing number of abortion
clinics required to match the health and safety requirements of similar facilities
are choosing to close their doors rather than come up to basic standards. That evidence speaks volumes about the appallingly low health and
safety standards of abortion clinics. It also unveils the cold profit motives
of clinic owners, who choose to close rather than pay for health and safety
measures that would help protect the women, if not the babies, who enter their
facilities.

Such
a high regard for profit and low regard for women's health and safety marked
the horrific Philadelphia abortion clinic of Dr. Kermit Gosnell, which was
likened to "a bad gas station restroom." Gosnell was ultimately
convicted of three counts of first-degree murder, for the death of three babies
he delivered alive and then killed with concentration camp inhumanity, and also
of involuntary manslaughter, for the death of Karnamaya Mongar, an immigrant
woman who died after an anesthesia overdose during a Gosnell abortion.

Clinic
regulations, such as vital requirements related to anesthesia, and on-site
health inspections might have prevented the deaths. But a Grand Jury report
revealed that under abortion advocate Governor Tom Ridge, "high-level
government officials" had made a political and ideological decision to
discontinue abortion clinic inspections because of "a concern that if they
did routine inspections, they may find that a lot of these facilities didn’t
meet [health and safety standards], and then there would be less abortion
facilities, less access to women to have an abortion."

That's
exactly what abortion advocates now claim about new
state regulations for abortion clinics. Rather than initiating or even simply
supporting efforts to protect women's health and safety in clinics through
regulation and inspection, they instead accuse politicians of a "war on
women."

The
real war on women is where the casualties are found--inside the abortion
clinics.